Last Updated:
January 30th, 2026
Group therapy
Group therapy for addiction brings people together to work on recovery. A trained therapist leads the group, but much of the healing comes from connecting with the other participants who understand what you’re going through. Many people feel nervous about group therapy at first, as the idea of sharing personal struggles with strangers can feel exposing. But group therapy for substance abuse and behavioural addiction has long proven to offer unique recovery benefits and breakthroughs.

What is group therapy for addiction recovery?
Group therapy is where several people meet regularly with a therapist to address addiction issues together. Groups typically include 6-12 people and meet once or twice a week, though in residential rehab, you may attend group sessions every day.
The therapist guides discussions, teaches coping skills, offers encouragement, and ensures everyone has a chance to participate. Unlike individual therapy, where the focus is entirely on you, group therapy is an opportunity to learn from each other’s successes and mistakes.
Group therapy for drug addiction and alcoholism can take different forms. Some groups are teaching-focused, which means they focus on information about addiction, triggers, and relapse prevention. Other groups focus on emotions and what’s happening in your life, where members discuss current struggles and receive feedback from others. Many rehab programmes use both types.
Why group therapy matters in recovery
Addiction is isolating. You may have pushed people away or felt too ashamed to be honest with your friends and family. Group therapy directly counters that isolation by putting you in a room with people who have been where you are. Hearing someone else describe exactly what you’ve experienced makes you realise your struggles aren’t unique or shameful.
Groups also provide accountability in ways individual therapy doesn’t. When you tell a group you’re going to try a new coping strategy or avoid a certain situation, you’re more likely to follow through because you know you need to report back. This gentle pressure helps when your own motivation wavers.
How does group therapy work alongside other therapies and treatments?
In comprehensive drug and alcohol rehab, you will attend group sessions alongside individual counselling, behavioural therapies, and sometimes holistic therapies. Successful recovery usually needs this kind of mix, with group therapy providing the community and accountability piece that’s difficult to replicate elsewhere.
Individual therapy gives you space to work on personal issues that are too private or complex for group discussion. This can be a good way to start processing trauma, working through family dynamics, practising your own coping strategies, and receiving real-time feedback. You can then discuss these with your group to see how other members have approached the same challenges.
If you are learning CBT techniques in individual sessions, group therapy lets you hear how others challenge their own unhelpful thoughts. This sharing of ideas is always encouraged because someone else’s approach may work better for you than those suggested by your therapist.
Medical aspects of treatment, like detox and medication management, all happen separately from group therapy but still support it. You can’t focus on psychological recovery if you’re still in acute withdrawal, so you first need to be stabilised for group therapy to be effective.
Aftercare often relies heavily on group therapy. Once you leave residential substance abuse or behavioural rehab, continuing with outpatient group sessions can maintain your connections and accountability. Many people also join peer-led local support groups like AA meetings or NA meetings, which are similar to professional group therapy but without a therapist.
Common fears about group therapy
Many people considering alcohol and drug rehab have worries about group therapy specifically. These concerns are normal, but addressing them upfront often makes the actual experience less daunting than expected:
Who can benefit from group therapy?
Group therapy works well for most people in addiction recovery, but it is particularly valuable if you:
- Feel isolated or like nobody understands what you’re experiencing
- Struggle to open up in one-on-one settings but find group dynamics easier
- Need accountability and structure beyond what individual therapy provides
- Benefit from hearing different perspectives and approaches to similar problems
- Want to practice relationship and social skills in a safe environment
- Find hope in seeing others succeed in recovery
Many people who assume they won’t like group therapy end up finding it the most valuable part of their treatment. The fears that make you hesitant often dissolve once you’re actually sitting with people who accept you without judgment.
What to look for in a rehab centre offering group therapy
First, check whether the programme employs qualified therapists to lead groups, not just peer supporters. While peer support is valuable, trained therapists can step in effectively when conflicts arise or when someone needs additional support.
Ask about group size. Smaller groups allow more individual attention. Larger groups offer more perspectives but less chance for everyone to talk. Most effective programmes keep groups small enough that everyone can participate in each session.
You can also look for programmes that offer different types of groups. For example, a good rehab centre might run groups that teach information on specific recovery topics, groups focused on emotions and what’s happening in your life, and educational groups for practising techniques.
You should also check whether group therapy continues in aftercare. The transition from residential treatment to regular life is when relapse is most likely, but continued group attendance can make a huge difference.
Getting the right support
Recovery.org can talk you through how different programmes structure their group work and what to expect from sessions. Contact us today and we will talk through which approaches may work best for you. The right mix of support makes recovery possible, and group therapy is always an important part of that mix.

